(Reuters) - Philippine stocks fell 1 percent while other Southeast Asian markets were subdued on Friday, amid worries that Sino-U.S. relations could worsen and optimism that the U.S. central bank may be "one-and-done" with rate hikes.

U.S. Federal Reserve officials are considering whether to signal a new wait-and-see mentality after a likely interest rate increase at their meeting this month, the Wall Street Journal reported.

However, investors' risk appetite was subdued after the arrest of a top Huawei executive in Canada on the request of the United States, which triggered fears of reigniting a U.S.-China trade row days after the two countries reached a truce.

Philippine stocks <.PSI> fell 1 percent on Friday but still closed 1.3 percent higher for the week, which included a cumulative 4.51 percent gain on Monday and Tuesday.

"We're still way up from several weeks ago so I would just attribute (the fall) to profit-taking in the past few days," said Charles William Ang, an associate analyst at COL Financial Group in Singapore.

Singaporean shares <.STI> ended 0.1 percent lower after rising as much as 1.1 percent, dragged down by utility and technology stocks.

"Following the Huawei incident, the market is extremely sensitive to any event that could disrupt the current so-called trade truce between U.S. and China," said Paul Chew, head of research at Phillip Securities Research.

"(Also) worrying for Singapore is the current downtrend in economic and industry data," he added.

Data released on Monday showed Singapore's November manufacturing growth fell to a 16-month low of 51.5.